Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CONTRIBUTORS
- PREFACE
- Chap. 1 CELL INJURY AND CELL DEATH
- Chap. 2 CLEAN AND ASEPTIC TECHNIQUE AT THE BEDSIDE
- Chap. 3 NEW ANTIMICROBIALS
- Chap. 4 IMMUNOMODULATORS AND THE “BIOLOGICS” IN CUTANEOUS EMERGENCIES
- Chap. 5 CRITICAL CARE: STUFF YOU REALLY, REALLY NEED TO KNOW
- Chap. 6 ACUTE SKIN FAILURE: CONCEPT, CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES, AND CARE
- Chap. 7 CUTANEOUS SYMPTOMS AND NEONATAL EMERGENCIES
- Chap. 8 NECROTIZING SOFT-TISSUE INFECTIONS, INCLUDING NECROTIZING FASCIITIS
- Chap. 9 LIFE-THREATENING BACTERIAL SKIN INFECTIONS
- Chap. 10 BACTEREMIA, SEPSIS, SEPTIC SHOCK, AND TOXIC SHOCK SYNDROME
- Chap. 11 STAPHYLOCOCCAL SCALDED SKIN SYNDROME
- Chap. 12 LIFE-THREATENING CUTANEOUS VIRAL DISEASES
- Chap. 13 LIFE-THREATENING CUTANEOUS FUNGAL AND PARASITIC DISEASES
- Chap. 14 LIFE-THREATENING STINGS, BITES, AND MARINE ENVENOMATIONS
- Chap. 15 SEVERE, ACUTE ADVERSE CUTANEOUS DRUG REACTIONS I: STEVENS–JOHNSON SYNDROME AND TOXIC EPIDERMAL NECROLYSIS
- Chap. 16 SEVERE, ACUTE ADVERSE CUTANEOUS DRUG REACTIONS II: DRESS SYNDROME AND SERUM SICKNESS-LIKE REACTION
- Chap. 17 SEVERE, ACUTE COMPLICATIONS OF DERMATOLOGIC THERAPIES
- Chap. 18 SEVERE, ACUTE ALLERGIC AND IMMUNOLOGICAL REACTIONS I: URTICARIA, ANGIOEDEMA, MASTOCYTOSIS, AND ANAPHYLAXIS
- Chap. 19 SEVERE, ACUTE ALLERGIC AND IMMUNOLOGICAL REACTIONS II: OTHER HYPERSENSITIVITIES AND IMMUNE DEFECTS, INCLUDING HIV
- Chap. 20 GRAFT VERSUS HOST DISEASE
- Chap. 21 ERYTHRODERMA/EXFOLIATIVE DERMATITIS
- Chap. 22 ACUTE, SEVERE BULLOUS DERMATOSES
- Chap. 23 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF PURPURA AND VASCULITIS, INCLUDING PURPURA FULMINANS
- Chap. 24 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISORDERS AND THEIR COMPLICATIONS
- Chap. 25 SKIN SIGNS OF SYSTEMIC INFECTIONS
- Chap. 26 SKIN SIGNS OF SYSTEMIC NEOPLASTIC DISEASES AND PARANEOPLASTIC CUTANEOUS SYNDROMES
- Chap. 27 BURN INJURY
- Chap. 28 EMERGENCY DERMATOSES OF THE ANORECTAL REGIONS
- Chap. 29 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES AND OTHER GENITOURETHRAL DISORDERS
- Chap. 30 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL SKIN DISORDERS: HEAT, COLD, ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT INJURIES
- Chap. 31 ENDOCRINOLOGIC EMERGENCIES IN DERMATOLOGY
- Chap. 32 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF SKIN TORTURE AND SELF-INFLICTED DERMATOSES
- Chap. 33 SKIN SIGNS OF POISONING
- Chap. 34 DISASTER PLANNING: MASS CASUALTY MANAGEMENT
- Chap. 35 CATASTROPHES IN COSMETIC PROCEDURES
- Chap. 36 LIFE-THREATENING DERMATOSES IN TRAVELERS
- Index
- References
Chap. 34 - DISASTER PLANNING: MASS CASUALTY MANAGEMENT
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- CONTRIBUTORS
- PREFACE
- Chap. 1 CELL INJURY AND CELL DEATH
- Chap. 2 CLEAN AND ASEPTIC TECHNIQUE AT THE BEDSIDE
- Chap. 3 NEW ANTIMICROBIALS
- Chap. 4 IMMUNOMODULATORS AND THE “BIOLOGICS” IN CUTANEOUS EMERGENCIES
- Chap. 5 CRITICAL CARE: STUFF YOU REALLY, REALLY NEED TO KNOW
- Chap. 6 ACUTE SKIN FAILURE: CONCEPT, CAUSES, CONSEQUENCES, AND CARE
- Chap. 7 CUTANEOUS SYMPTOMS AND NEONATAL EMERGENCIES
- Chap. 8 NECROTIZING SOFT-TISSUE INFECTIONS, INCLUDING NECROTIZING FASCIITIS
- Chap. 9 LIFE-THREATENING BACTERIAL SKIN INFECTIONS
- Chap. 10 BACTEREMIA, SEPSIS, SEPTIC SHOCK, AND TOXIC SHOCK SYNDROME
- Chap. 11 STAPHYLOCOCCAL SCALDED SKIN SYNDROME
- Chap. 12 LIFE-THREATENING CUTANEOUS VIRAL DISEASES
- Chap. 13 LIFE-THREATENING CUTANEOUS FUNGAL AND PARASITIC DISEASES
- Chap. 14 LIFE-THREATENING STINGS, BITES, AND MARINE ENVENOMATIONS
- Chap. 15 SEVERE, ACUTE ADVERSE CUTANEOUS DRUG REACTIONS I: STEVENS–JOHNSON SYNDROME AND TOXIC EPIDERMAL NECROLYSIS
- Chap. 16 SEVERE, ACUTE ADVERSE CUTANEOUS DRUG REACTIONS II: DRESS SYNDROME AND SERUM SICKNESS-LIKE REACTION
- Chap. 17 SEVERE, ACUTE COMPLICATIONS OF DERMATOLOGIC THERAPIES
- Chap. 18 SEVERE, ACUTE ALLERGIC AND IMMUNOLOGICAL REACTIONS I: URTICARIA, ANGIOEDEMA, MASTOCYTOSIS, AND ANAPHYLAXIS
- Chap. 19 SEVERE, ACUTE ALLERGIC AND IMMUNOLOGICAL REACTIONS II: OTHER HYPERSENSITIVITIES AND IMMUNE DEFECTS, INCLUDING HIV
- Chap. 20 GRAFT VERSUS HOST DISEASE
- Chap. 21 ERYTHRODERMA/EXFOLIATIVE DERMATITIS
- Chap. 22 ACUTE, SEVERE BULLOUS DERMATOSES
- Chap. 23 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF PURPURA AND VASCULITIS, INCLUDING PURPURA FULMINANS
- Chap. 24 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF CONNECTIVE TISSUE DISORDERS AND THEIR COMPLICATIONS
- Chap. 25 SKIN SIGNS OF SYSTEMIC INFECTIONS
- Chap. 26 SKIN SIGNS OF SYSTEMIC NEOPLASTIC DISEASES AND PARANEOPLASTIC CUTANEOUS SYNDROMES
- Chap. 27 BURN INJURY
- Chap. 28 EMERGENCY DERMATOSES OF THE ANORECTAL REGIONS
- Chap. 29 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASES AND OTHER GENITOURETHRAL DISORDERS
- Chap. 30 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL SKIN DISORDERS: HEAT, COLD, ULTRAVIOLET LIGHT INJURIES
- Chap. 31 ENDOCRINOLOGIC EMERGENCIES IN DERMATOLOGY
- Chap. 32 EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT OF SKIN TORTURE AND SELF-INFLICTED DERMATOSES
- Chap. 33 SKIN SIGNS OF POISONING
- Chap. 34 DISASTER PLANNING: MASS CASUALTY MANAGEMENT
- Chap. 35 CATASTROPHES IN COSMETIC PROCEDURES
- Chap. 36 LIFE-THREATENING DERMATOSES IN TRAVELERS
- Index
- References
Summary
DISASTERS AND OTHER emergencies can strain and even damage – at least transiently – a health care system. The increased awareness of natural and manmade disasters has created a relatively new need for health care providers: preparedness and response for medical emergencies. To remain both robust and flexible, the medical systems must establish protocols, perform exercises, and learn from the experience of others. Facing threats since it was born 62 years ago, the Israeli medical system has conducted a comprehensive preparedness activity that has been tested in large-scale exercises and in large- and small-scale violent conflicts.
AN OVERVIEW OF THE ISRAELI MEDICAL SYSTEM
Israel has 24 public acute care hospitals in addition to its geriatric, psychiatric, and private hospitals. The hospital system serves both the civilian and the military population. Six are trauma centers (level 1) located in densely populated urban areas; 14 others are acute care medical centers without cardiosurgery or neurosurgery services (level 2), and the rest are relatively remote community hospitals (level 3) that can offer triage and limited surgical and surge capacity. All Israeli hospitals maintain continuous alert for mass casualty incidents (MCIs) in line with a unified national doctrine. Thus, we regard the hospitals as part of the first-responders system. In the extrahospital arena, there is a highly developed network of outpatient clinics, part of the four health maintenance organizations' (HMOs') network of primary care clinics.
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- Emergency Dermatology , pp. 327 - 330Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011